You are looking at purified awesome: This is Ford's latest Super Duty diesel, a turbocharged, reverse-flow, 6.7-liter V8 designed without the help of an outside contractor. It's nicknamed "Scorpion." Notice anything weird about those cam buckets?

For the past twenty-eight years, Ford has used Navistar International (formerly International Harvester) as its contractor of choice for diesel pickup engines. No more. The Scorpion is the first Ford oil-burner to be designed completely in-house, and it comes out of the gate with a big 'ol torquey bang.*

You can find an in-depth look at the Scorpion's technical craziness here, but in the meantime, take a gander at the valvetrain. In the interest of limiting wear, the 6.7 boasts something called "single plane" bridgeless rocker arms. Basically, instead of using a bridge to open or close each set of valves in tandem, each valve is attached a single rocker. Here's the funky part, though: Due to packaging constraints and a desire to avoid wonky angles, the Scorpion uses just one cam follower (a.k.a. bucket/tappet), not two, for every pair of pushrods/valves.

If you look closely, you can see the cam bucket sitting down in the valley, along with its hollow follower and a couple of pushrods sticking out of it. Cool, eh?

*Because we are immature fools, we must point out the following: That is, in fact, what she said.